Before there was LogLog, SuperLogLog or HyperLogLog there was Probabilistic Counting with Stochastic Averaging (PCSA) from the seminal work “Probabilistic Counting Algorithms for Data Base Applications” (also known as the “FM Sketches” due to its two authors, Flajolet and Martin). The basis of PCSA matches that of the other Flajolet distinct value (DV) counters: hash values from a collection into binary strings, use patterns in those strings as indicators for the number of distinct values in that collection (bit-pattern observables), then use stochastic averaging to combine m trials into a better estimate. Our HyperLogLog post has more details on these estimators as well as stochastic averaging.

Observables

The choice of observable pattern in PCSA comes from the knowledge that in a collection of randomly generated binary strings, the following probabilities occur:

For each value added to the DV counter, a suitable hash is created and the position of the least-significant (right-most) 1 is determined. The corresponding position in a bitmap is updated and stored. I’ve created the simulation below so that you can get a feel for how this plays out.

Click above to run the bit-pattern simulation

(All bit representations in this post are numbered from 0 (the least-significant bit) on the right. This is the opposite of the direction in which they’re represented in the paper.)

Run the simulation a few times and notice how the bitmap is filled in. In particular, notice that it doesn’t necessarily fill in from the right side to the left — there are gaps that exist for a time that eventually get filled in. As the cardinality increases there will be a block of 1s on the right (the high probability slots), a block of 0s on the left (the low probability slots) and a “fringe” (as Flajolet et al. called it) of 1s and 0s in the middle.

I added a small pointer below the bitmap in the simulation to show how the cardinality corresponds to the expected bit position (based on the above probabilities). Notice what Flajolet et al. saw when they ran this same experiment: the least-significant (right-most) 0 is a pretty good estimator for the cardinality! In fact when you run multiple trials you see that this least-significant 0 for a given cardinality has a narrow distribution. When you combine the results with stochastic averaging it leads to a small relative error of and estimates the cardinality of the set quite well. You might have also observed that the most-significant (left-most) 1 can also be used for an estimator for the cardinality but it isn’t as clear-cut. This value is exactly the observable used in LogLog, SuperLogLog and HyperLogLog and does in fact lead to the larger relative error of (in the case of HLL).

There is one point to note about PCSA and small cardinalities: Flajolet et al. mention that there are “initial nonlinearities” in the algorithm which result in poor estimation at small cardinalities () which can be dealt with by introducing corrections but they leave it as an exercise for the reader to determine what those corrections are. Scheuermann et al. did the leg work in “Near-Optimal Compression of Probabilistic Counting Sketches for Networking Applications” and came up with a small correction term (see equation 6). Another approach is to simply use the linear (ball-bin) counting introduced in the HLL paper.

Set Operations

Just like HLL and KMV, unions are trivial to compute and lossless. The PCSA sketch is essentially a “marker” for runs of zeroes, so to perform a union you merely bit-wise OR the two sets of bitmaps together. Folding a PCSA down to a smaller m works the same way as HLL but instead of HLL’s max you bit-wise OR the bitmaps together. Unfortunately for intersections you have the same issue as HLL, you must perform them using the inclusion/exclusion principle. We haven’t done the plots on intersection errors for PCSA but you can imagine they are similar to HLL (and have the benefit of the better relative error ).

PCSA vs. HLL

That fact that PCSA has a better relative error than HyperLogLog with the same number of registers () is slightly deceiving in that (the number of stored observations) are different sizes. A better way to look at it is to fix the accuracy of the sketches and see how they compare. If we would like to have the same relative error from both sketches we can see that the relationship between registers is:

Interestingly, PCSA only needs a little more than half the registers of an HLL to reach the same relative error. But this is also deceiving. What we should be asking is what is the size of each sketch if they provide the same relative error? HLL commonly uses a register width of 5 bits to count to billions whereas PCSA requires 32 bits. That means a PCSA sketch with the same accuracy as an HLL would be:

Therefore,

A PCSA sketch with the same accuracy is 3.6 times larger than HLL!

Optimizations

But what if you could make PCSA smaller by reducing the size of the bitmaps? Near the end of the paper in the Scrolling section, Flajolet et al. bring up the point that you can make the bitmaps take up less space. From the simulation you can observe that with a high probability there is a block of consecutive 1s on the right side of the bitmap and a block of consecutive 0s on the left side of the bitmap with a fringe in between. If one found the “global fringe” — that is the region defined by the left-most 1 and right-most 0 across all bitmaps — then only those bits need to be stored (along with an offset value). The authors theorized that a fringe width of 8 bits would be sufficient (though they fail to mention if there are any dependencies on the number of distinct values counted). We put this to the test.

In our simulations it appears that a fringe width of 12 bits is necessary to provide an unbiased estimator comparable to full-fringe PCSA (32-bit) for the range of distinct values we analyzed. (Notice the consistent bias of smaller fringe sizes.) There are many interesting reasons that this “fringe” concept can fail. Look at the notes to this post for more. If we take the above math and update 32 to 12 bits per register (and include the 32 bit offset value) we get:

This is getting much closer to HLL! The combination of tighter bounds on the estimate and the fact that the fringe isn’t really that wide in practice result in PCSA being very close to the size of the much lauded HLL. This got us thinking about further compression techniques for PCSA. After all, we only need to get the sketch about 1/3 smaller to be comparable in size to HLL. In a future post we will talk about what happens if you Huffman code the PCSA bitmaps and the tradeoffs you make when you do this.

Summary

PCSA provides for all of the goodness of HLL: very fast updates making it suitable for real-time use, small footprint compared to the information that it provides, tunable accuracy and unions. The fact that it has a much better relative error per register than HLL indicates that it should get more credit than it does. Unfortunately, each bitmap in PCSA requires more space than HLL and you still get less accuracy per bit. Look for a future post on how it is possible to use compression (e.g. Huffman encoding) to reduce the number of bits per bitmap, thus reducing the error per bit to match that of HLL, resulting in an approach that matches HLL in size but exceeds its precision!

Notes on the Fringe

While we were putting this post together we discovered many interesting things to look at with respect to fringe optimization. One of the questions we wanted to answer was “How often does the limited size of the fringe muck up a bitmap?” Below is a plot that shows how often any given sketch had a truncation event (that affected the DV estimate) in the fringe of any one of its bitmaps for a given fringe width (i.e. some value could not be stored in the space available).

Note that this is an upper bound on the error that could be generated by truncation. If you compare the number of runs that had a truncation event (almost all of the runs) with the error plot in the post it is quite shocking that the errors are as small as they are.

Since we might not get around to all of the interesting research here, we are calling out to the community to help! Some ideas:

There are likely a few ways to improve the fringe truncation. Since PCSA is so sensitive to the least-significant 1 in each bitmap, it would be very interesting to see how different approaches affect the algorithm. For example, in our algorithm we “left” truncated meaning that all bitmaps had to have a one in the least-significant position of the bitmap in order to move up the offset. It would be interesting to look at “right” truncation. If one bitmap is causing many of the others to not record incoming values perhaps it should be bumped up. Is there some math to back up this intuition?

It is interesting to us that the fringe width truncation events are DV dependent. We struggled with the math on this for a bit before we just stopped. Essentially we want to know what is the width of the theoretical fringe? It obviously appears to be DV dependent and some sort of coupon collector problem with unequal probabilities. Someone with better math skills than us needs to help here.

Closing thoughts

We uncovered PCSA again as a way to go back to first principles and see if there are lessons to be learned that could be applied to HLL to make it even better. For instance, can all of this work on the fringe be applied to HLL to reduce the number of bits per register while still maintaining the same precision? HLL effectively records the “strandline” (what we call the left-most 1s). More research into how this strandline behaves and if it is possible to improve the storage of it through truncation could reduce the standard HLL register width from 5 bits to 4, a huge savings! Obviously, we uncovered a lot of open questions with this research and we feel there are algorithmic improvements to HLL right around the corner. We have done some preliminary tests and the results so far are intriguing. Stay tuned!